We concluded that simultaneous colonic and liver resection should be undertaken in selected patients with synchronous colorectal liver resection regardless of the extent of hepatectomy; major liver resection, in fact, seems capable of providing better oncological results, allowing resection of liver micrometastases that, in almost one-third of the patients, are located in the same liver lobe of macroscopic lesions, without increased morbidity rates.
Conventional distal pancreatectomy (cDP) and total pancreatectomy (cTP) also involve removal of the spleen. The spleen, however, is an important organ in the immunologic defense of the host and is worthy of preservation if this can be safely achieved. We performed a spleen-preserving total pancreatectomy (SPTP), with good results, in a Caucasian woman, 66-year-old, affected by pancreatic metastases of renal clear cell carcinoma. This is the first report of a SPTP for pancreatic metastases to our knowledge, and we therefore wish to describe the surgical technique and to suggest the possible indications for this new technique.
Hepatic adenomatosis is a rare benign disease that is more common in young and middle-aged women who are non-steroid dependent; it is usually symptomatic, progressive, and susceptible to hemorrhagic complications. Malignant transformation within adenomas is rare. The management of hepatic adenomatosis remains difficult due to the absence of predictive signs of complications, other than the size of the adenomas. Resective surgery is usually indicated, but liver transplantation could be an indication in highly symptomatic or progressive forms of the disease and represents the treatment of choice in cases of malignant transformation. We report a case of intrahepatic rupture of a caudate lobe adenoma which occurred in an adolescent with hepatic adenomatosis; we also present a brief review of the literature.
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